| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age |
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A little benchmarking showed that we were encountering far too many
wakeups, leading to severe performance degradation; we had a bunch
of threads all sleeping on the same condition variable (taskqs)
and this woke them all up, resulting in heavy mutex contention.
Since we only need one of the threads to wake, and we don't care which
one, let's just wake only one. This reduced RTT latency from about
240 us down to about 30 s. (1/8 of the former cost.)
There's still a bunch of tuning to do; performance remains worse than
we would like.
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This is partly caused by a race, but also an incorrect boolean short-circuit
that I had not reasoned about properly. Mostly changing the boolean
order fixes the condition, so that we prefer to start than to stop, if both
are set.
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This compiles correctly, but doesn't actually deliver events yet.
As part of this, I've made most of the initializables in nng
safe to tear-down if uninitialized (or set to zero e.g. via calloc).
This makes it loads easier to write the teardown on error code, since
I can deinit everything, without worrying about which things have been
initialized and which have not.
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Windows is getting there. Needs a couple of more more hours to enable
everything, especially IPC, and most of the work at this point is probably
some combination of debug and tweaking things like error handling.
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In an attempt to simplify the protocol implementation, and hopefully
track down a close related race, we've made it so that most protocols
need not worry about locks, and can access the socket lock if they do
need a lock. They also let the socket manage their workers, for the
most part. (The req protocol is special, since it needs a top level
work distributor, *and* a resender.)
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Also we added a two phase shutdown for threads.
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This may also address a race in closing down pipes. Now pipes are always
registered with the socket. They also always have both a sender and receiver
thread. If the protocol doesn't need one or the other, the stock thread just
exits early.
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